Kinetic Die Casting Company uses aluminum die casting to product parts, here are some capabilities. http://www.kineticdiecasting.com/capabilities.html Die casting is a process that involves creating metal parts. This is achieved by forcing molten metal under high pressure into a mold or …
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Two Missouri die-casting companies weathering storm
HANNIBAL, Mo. — Automotive manufacturers in Marion and Monroe counties have been hit hard by the economic downturn and the slumping automobile industry.
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Pace Industries is closing its doors, and Intermet filed bankruptcy, and its assets were bought at an auction, leaving the future of the plants in Monroe City and Palmyra in doubt.
However, two area die-casting manufacturers have weathered the worst of the wild economic ride — Lakeside Casting Solutions in Monroe City and Spartan Light Metal Products Inc. in Hannibal.
Lakeside Casting Solutions has cut its employees’ hours, but none of its 24 workers has been laid off.
“That’s the decision we made,” Lakeside President Bob Lehenbauer said. “We didn’t want to have to lose anybody over the situation. We keep our staff so low to start with, and we do cross-training where everybody can do everybody’s job so it’s not so compartmentalized. We also took advantage of the slow time to do some added training for the future.”
Lakeside tapped into the Missouri’s Shared Work Unemployment Compensation Program to help workers when hours were reduced. The program allows an employer to divide the available work or hours of work among a specified group of affected employees in lieu of a layoff, and it allows employees to receive a portion of their unemployment benefits while working reduced hours.
Also helpful has been the fact that only about 30 or 40 percent of Lakeside’s manufacturing is for the automotive industry, although Lehenbauer said auto industry manufacturing is often an indicator of things to come.
“What you see in automotive, the others follow suit. We see hints of that happening,” he said. “People are afraid to spend money.”
Lehenbauer, Mike Madden, Carl Donath and Jeff Mudd started the business almost seven years ago. July is a historically slow month in manufacturing, so Lehenbauer said Lakeside cut back to three 10-hour days a week. The pay difference for employees was made up through the Shared Work program.
“We’re telling our guys to take advantage of time, because down the road when people start feeling comfortable about releasing dollars, we’re going to get pretty busy,” he said.
Spartan Light Metal Products has three plants, including one in Hannibal. More than 200 of the company’s 750 hourly and salaried employees were laid off last year, but some workers are starting to be called back.
Spartan Vice President of Human Resources Philip Zampogna said the company is “definitely weathering the storm.”
“In fact, we are profitable, but that’s because tough decisions were made, including keeping the Hannibal facility open,” Zampogna said. “We felt like we made a commitment to the community and a commitment to the employees there, and also we had a particular customer we are servicing there.”
About 60 percent of what Spartan manufactures is for the automotive industry. Zampogna said Spartan’s manufacturing of “difficult parts,” highly engineered and machined parts, adds value to customers. The company’s diversification across the automotive manufacturing base, with customers in the United States and Asia, also helps.

Lakeside Die Casting Company
He said since the companywide layoffs, staffing has remained steady.
“We are cautiously optimistic for the remainder of this year,” Zampogna said. “We look at a number of different automotive forecasting sources, and those indicate a slight uptake in orders for remainder of this year, and those forecast even better (activity) next year.
“But the words ‘cautiously optimistic’ are critical here.”
He emphasized customers will be looking at suppliers’ finances in the coming months.
“Financial viability and actually being profitable are going to be key for suppliers during this rebound,” he said. “Our customers are looking at us, making sure we’re financially viable and have solid business plans. That’s one of the reasons we made some changes in our work force, to make sure we remained profitable.”
— apierceall@whig.com/
(573) 221-5879
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures aluminum military parts, aluminum hardware, and aluminum die castings. Visit our website for a quote: Kinetic Die Casting Company
ALUMINUM AUTO PARTS
ALUMINUM AUTO PARTS. The human history can be very conveniently divided into epochs or ages such as the ancient stone, the Iron Age, or the copper age. These ages have been called so because of the kind of metal or element which was dominating all the major architecture and other structures of that particular period of time. Going further on those lines we can say that the present is sort of like the aluminum age. Aluminum has become the new replacement to almost all the other metals, be it utensils or airplanes. One major use which aluminum has found for itself is the manufacture of various automobile parts. Here is guide to what makes aluminum such a sorted after raw material for cars and other automobiles.
WHY ALUMINUM?
If we do a careful survey of the market of the automobile parts we will find that more and more companies have switched over to aluminum as the primary material to make the auto parts.
Aluminum is a wiser choice because as compared to other alloys and metals, the automobile outer body made out of aluminum is almost one-third in weight. Now lighter cars are what the companies are aiming at and that’s what they are getting by using aluminum. Apart from external use the metal is also being used in conduction of electric currents inside the autos. Aluminum is better conductor of heat and electricity than copper and hence the risks of the wires getting overheated are also reduced considerably.
The best part about using aluminum for making auto parts is that is highly resistant to corrosion. Automobile engines and other inner as well as outer parts are particularly vulnerable to this degradation and aluminum provides the perfect protection.
So whenever you are buying your ride make sure it’s got aluminum parts inside and outside to guarantee maximum output.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures a lot of aluminum rooftile plates , trim tile molds, and military die casting. If you would like a quote, please visit our website: Kinetic Die Casting Company
Optimism of US Industrial Companies Improves
Optimism of US Industrial Companies Improves. Large US industrial manufacturers are far more optimistic about domestic and global economies than they were three months ago, but most still expect revenue to be flat or down over the next 12 months, according to a quarterly survey.
The survey, by the PricewaterhouseCoopers consultancy, found 43 percent of respondents are optimistic about the U.S. economy over the next 12 months, up a whopping 27 percentage points from the first quarter. Those saying they are pessimistic fell to 18 percent, down an even larger 37 points.
Asked about prospects for the global economy, 43 percent said they were optimistic, more than triple the number who said so in the first quarter.
PwC polled 60 industrial executives at companies with an average market capitalization of $8 billion and, for comparison, 110 executives in other sectors.
The telephone survey was done between mid-April and mid-July. It found industrial executives are more optimistic about both the U.S. and world economies than their peers in other sectors.
More of the executives polled said they were planning to hire new workers and fund new investments, and more said they were considering buying another business or expanding in overseas markets.
But large majorities said lack of demand remains a barrier to growth and said their plants are running at three-quarters capacity or less.
Tax policy and legislative and regulatory pressures were cited as areas of concern by 4 in 10 of those surveyed, and capital constraints also remain a barrier to growth.
However, industrial executives are less worried about energy prices, exchange rates or interest rates than they have been in recent quarters.
INDUSTRIAL, COMPANIES, MANUFACTURING, SURVEY, EXECUTIVES, WORKERS, EMPLOYMENT
Reuters | 07 Aug 2009 | 09:50 AM ET
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures aluminum and zinc die casting parts. Samples of KDC’s work include die cast speaker parts, aluminum tile plates, and other die cast metal parts. If you would like to have a quote please visit our website: Kinetic Die Casting Company
One Way To Save U.S. Manufacturing Jobs
One Way To Save U.S. Manufacturing Jobs
Christopher Steiner, 04.02.09, 06:00 PM EDT
Forbes Magazine dated April 27, 2009By farming out some factory work to China and Mexico, Doug Smith helps the U.S. manufacturing sector cling to what’s left.
The way to save U.S. manufacturing jobs is to export some of them. That seeming illogic lies behind the business model of SmithCNC-USA, a North Lawrence, Ohio firm that helps midwestern manufacturers get components and raw materials abroad. By leaning on cheap Chinese suppliers, they keep at least some value-added work in the hands of domestic factories. Absent the partial outsourcing, these American goods producers might be so uncompetitive that they’d be out of business.
The founder and sole owner of SmithCNC-USA is Douglas Smith, a chatty 50-year-old ex-machinist with both cost-cutting and patriotic streaks. He says he’s doing his part to preserve the shrinking U.S. manufacturing sector, which since 2000 has shed 4 million jobs, or 27% of its workforce. (That compares with a 2.5% decline and a 2.9% increase, respectively, for the freshly gutted construction and financial industries.)
Since launching his company in 2002, Smith has trekked to places like Pingliang, China, 1,000 miles from the coast and bordering a desert that stretches north into Mongolia. He was there to check out a company that had sounded good on paper and was bidding to supply large machined castings. What he walked into: a dilapidated, Soviet-built military factory where light bulbs swung from wires, birds frolicked in the hallways, and people in cold, broken-windowed conference rooms could see their breath. Cross that one off the list. Smith got the parts from a factory in Xi’an, 200 miles away, with better amenities.
Smith owns a four-bedroom house in North Lawrence and a small apartment in Jining (600 miles into the interior from Shanghai), but he is essentially a full-time road warrior. Last year he spent 225 days in China and 60 in Mexico, logging 200,000 miles in the air. He rarely spends more than two days in one place and has choked down plenty of challenging meals–donkey, dog and locust included–for the cause. “I’ll never look at my golden retrievers the same,” he says.
There are other reminders that life is very different in places where manufacturing labor is cheap. In 2004, while staying at a supposed four-star hotel in Jining, Smith heard a thud outside his window. On one of the side roofs lay the body of a man who had just fallen to his death from an upper level. “That kind of stuff just happens over there,” Smith recalls. “I see a fatality almost every trip.”
Smith’s customers are U.S. manufacturers doing small and medium-size production runs, either for their own end products or as contract suppliers to other U.S. manufacturing firms. If they are lucky, they eke out gross profit margins between 20% and 30%. That is, after paying for labor and raw materials, they have at best 30 cents of the revenue dollar remaining to cover overhead and depreciation on their machinery. Smith says that by subcontracting some of the work abroad–for example, the intake manifold in a car’s air system–these contractors can add 20 points to that gross margin, and that’s after paying Smith his fee of 5% to 7% of the foreign invoices. In seven years Smith has amassed 225 vendors in Mexico and China that do the subcontract work.
Smith expects revenue of at least $15 million this year, up from $10 million in 2008 and $3 million in 2007. His top line includes the value of the parts, his brokerage fees and any additional consulting charges for determining which parts should be made in-house and which should be outsourced. He employs no factory hands; his 12 employees push paper and make sales calls.
Smith started out making parts, not ordering them. After getting a mechanical engineering degree from Stark Technical College in Canton, Ohio, he worked for various manufacturers in the Midwest. In 1997, staked with $200,000 in savings and a patchwork of small business loans, he started his own machine shop but was forced to shut down in 2002 because he couldn’t compete on price. He then took a job as head of factory automation for nearby ASC Industries, maker of automobile water pumps and one of his old customers. ASC was setting up a joint venture with a parts supplier in China and tapped Smith to get it off the ground. “I didn’t know anything about China, and I didn’t want to know anything,” he says. “If we couldn’t do it here, I figured, it wasn’t worth doing.”
Within months Smith had set up a 1,000-person plant in Yanzhou filled with equipment from his defunct machine shop and others. ASC slashed its production costs by 25%, enabling it to lower prices and snag more orders. Since 2004 ASC has grown from 50 to 300 employees, including 200 factory workers; its revenue is up twentyfold, to more than $100 million.Most of Smith’s 30 clients don’t want to set up whole manufacturing arms in China; they just want cheap quality parts and tools. Take Derek Lidderdale, vice president of Omni Die Casting in Massillon, Ohio. Omni sells metal parts like the aluminum housings that go into lighting fixtures in factories. These are made by injecting molten aluminum into 3,000-pound molds made out of steel. Tooling up these custom-made molds, which wear out after 100,000 injections, is a big part of Omni’s cost structure. “We were getting killed by foreign tooling,” he says. “We were looking for a source but didn’t want somebody who wasn’t going to go over there and examine the process and the product in person.”
Smith found a Chinese outfit in Ningbo in Zhejiang Province to make the molds for $40,000, a third what they cost when Omni used U.S. tool-and-die workers. Since signing up with Smith 18 months ago, Omni has made 45 new kinds of parts, all requiring separate molds or tools. In that time Omni hasn’t had to eliminate any production jobs.
Smith stitched together a more elaborate supply chain for Broadstar Wind Systems, a 12-month-old company in Dallas that makes wind turbines. Smith took Broadstar’s design and rousted 65 suppliers to crank out 225 different parts, allowing the company to piece together a prototype in less than two months. Brent Myers, Broadstar’s vice president of global procurement, says Smith has saved the company 43% compared with domestically sourced parts, allowing Broadstar to hire 30 people in the last year.
Kinetic Die Casting is located in North Hollywood,California. KDC specializes in manufacturing zinc and aluminum alloy casting parts. If you would like a quote, please visit our website:Kinetic Die Casting Company
Revstone and KPS Portfolio Co. Goes for Metaldyne Assets
Hephaestus Holdings looks to buy the auto parts maker’s powertrain assets while Revstone looks to capitalize on chassis operations buy.
By JONATHAN MARINO
July 28, 2009
A pair of private equity firms are vying for separate parts of Metaldyne Corp. assets; Hephaestus Holdings, a KPS Capital company, and Revstone will look to buy much of the bankrupt auto parts maker’s chassis business.
The automotive sector, virtually across the board, wears tire tracks on its back after being especially hard hit during the recession. GM’s and Chrysler’s respective bankruptcies set off a chain of events affecting companies serving them from parts makers to GPS trackers.
Revstone has been making distressed acquisitions lately; earlier this year, it bought six plants from bankrupt auto parts maker Contech.
Hephaestus was approved as a stalking horse bidder for powertrain assets by a New York bankruptcy court and Revstone was approved to make the chassis operations bid; auctions will commence August 5 with bids due two days earlier.
Hephaestus wants to buy Metaldyne’s sintered products, European forgings and vibration controls products operations located in Europe, Asia, Brazil, Mexico and America. A Hephaestus affiliate looks to buy Metaldyne’s Bluffton, Ind.; Litchfield, Mich., and, subject to certain conditions, the Twinsburg, Ohio, plant. KPS Capital Partners will provide Hephaestus with a significant, yet unspecified, cash investment to support letters of credit and working capital.
Separately, Revstone is bidding on the purchase of Metaldyne’s chassis operations in Edon, Ohio; Greensboro, N.C.; Barcelona, Spain, and Iztapalapa, Mexico. The auction date for that segment will be August 3, with bids due July 31.
Revstone and Hephaestus are not the only two bidders for Metaldyne’s parts, however. RHJ International initially submitted a bid, which was trumped by Hephaestus, and a Carlyle bid was beat by Revstone. Calls were not returned by press time.
Metaldyne had 2008 revenue of $1.57 billion.
Metaldyne’s Balance Shaft Module and Tubular businesses are being marketed by the investment banking firm Donnelly Penman & Partners. Metaldyne’s Powertrain and Chassis operations are being marketed by Lazard.
Kinetic Die Casting is a die casting company specializing in aluminum and zinc parts. If you would like to request a quote, please visit our website:Kinetic Die Casting Company